Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Churches that are not reconciled with one another weaken the
experience of mercy that unites believers to God and with each other,
Anglican Archbishop Justin Welby of Canterbury said.

By not reconciling with one other, “our worship is diminished and our
capacity to grow close together with God is reduced,” he said on
September 20 in Assisi during a discussion on ecumenism.

“The failure of ecumenism imprisons mercy and prevents its liberation and its power with one another,” he said.

Speaking before Pope Francis arrived in Assisi for an inter-religious
peace meeting, Archbishop Welby joined other Christian leaders
exploring how love, charity and mercy help foster peace and unity among
Christian denominations.

Mercy is the “engine of reconciliation,” Archbishop Welby said,
and it is “the source of our capacity for the evangelisation of the
world in which we live.”

“Mercy begins with the mercy that each of us experiences in the
sacrament of reconciliation; the knowledge that we ourselves are
accepted,” he said.

Suffering and martyrdom, the archbishop added, also unite Christians and are a visible sign of ecumenism for the world.

“If we do not suffer together, we do not know the meaning of the
ecumenism of mercy,” he said. “When they kill us, they do not ask if we
are Anglican, Presbyterian, Catholic or Orthodox; we are one in Christ
for them. So why are we divided when they are not killing us?”

Echoing Jesus’s prayer “that they may be one so that the world may
know that I come from the Father,” Archbishop Welby said that the
evangelisation of the world “depends on that ecumenism of mercy.”

While they may have theological differences, he said, Christians must
learn to “disagree well” and “learn to love one another with good
disagreement.”

Evangelisation depends on the visible sign of love and unity. If not,
churches will be unable “to carry out Jesus’ command to go out into the
world,” he said.

“It depends on the world seeing visibly that we belong to one another
and that we love one another,” Archbishop Welby said. “Without that, we
have nothing to say to a world that is incapable of resolving its own
differences.”